Introducing Chris to the Iron Resilience Movement

Welcome Chris to the Iron Resilience Brotherhood

We’re proud to introduce a new brother in the movement—Chris. A man who walks the path of discipline, strength, and personal evolution, Chris has officially joined Iron Resilience.

He’s been grinding in silence, living the code, and now stepping up to inspire others. His journey reflects everything we stand for: Discipline over genetics. Character over comfort. Strength forged daily.

Follow Chris on Instagram

Support the brotherhood. Drop a follow and watch how a real man builds himself from the ground up:

@chrisironresilience


Iron Resilience Isn’t Just a Brand. It’s a Movement.

If you believe in earning your strength, leading with discipline, and building a life worthy of respect—you belong with us. This is a call to arms for the men who still believe in resilience forged through fire.

Join the Movement

Let’s build something unbreakable. Together.

#IronResilience #DisciplineNotGenetics #Brotherhood #JoinTheMovement

The Flexible Ketogenic Eating Protocol for High Performance and Fat Loss

The Flexible Ketogenic Eating Protocol for High Performance and Fat Loss

When most people hear “keto,” they think of a rigid, unforgiving diet with zero carbs, endless bacon, and a constant battle against cravings. But for those of us who live active lives, train hard, and spend long hours on our feet — keto can look very different.

This guide outlines a flexible, performance-based approach to ketogenic eating. Whether you’re taking your first steps into fat adaptation or you’re deep into bodybuilding, steps-heavy workdays, or functional fitness, this protocol gives you tools to succeed without burning out.


Why Carbs Aren’t the Enemy — But Discipline Is the Solution

Carbs aren’t evil — they’re just overused and abused in today’s world. Processed sugar, constant snacking, and emotional eating have created a widespread addiction that’s hard to break.

We understand — breaking the carb cycle can be brutal. But the good news is: it gets easier. Cravings fade, energy becomes stable, and you start using fat (your own body fat included) as fuel. Once you reset your system, you can reintroduce carbs as a tool, not a trap.


The Iron Resilience Keto Approach: Built for Real Life

This protocol blends OMAD (One Meal a Day), intermittent fasting, and targeted or cyclical keto strategies. The structure adapts to your activity level, hunger, training demands, and goals.

Base Macros (Adjust to Fit Your Body):

  • Calories: Maintenance or -500 to -800 for fat loss
  • Protein: High — enough to support lean mass (1g per lb of body weight minimum)
  • Fat: Primary fuel source
  • Net Carbs:
    • Strict: <20g
    • Targeted: 30–50g
    • Cyclical: 50–70g (on high-output days only)

Note: Unless you’re sedentary or chasing therapeutic keto for epilepsy or a medical condition, being dogmatic about 20g of carbs isn’t necessary. For active individuals, especially those walking 15,000+ steps, training hard, or extremely lean, trying to function on under 20g net carbs can be counterproductive. Strict keto (20g or less) may work on rest days or during deloads, but most people following this protocol will perform best in the 50–70g range — without sacrificing the metabolic benefits of fat adaptation.


Flexible Meal Templates

1. OMAD (One Meal a Day)

Best for: Deep ketosis, mental clarity, fat-burning focus

  • Keto coffee or butter coffee during the day
  • Large nutrient-dense dinner:
    • Fatty protein (beef, salmon, turkey, pork)
    • Eggs, cheese, avocado
    • Low-carb veggies (zucchini, spinach, eggplant, mushrooms)
    • Optional: small side of cottage cheese, Greek yogurt, or fermented veg

2. TMAD (Two Meals a Day)

Best for: Balanced training/work days

  • First meal post-workout or around midday
  • Second meal at dinner
  • Both meals feature lean or fatty proteins, fats for energy, and low-net-carb vegetables

3. 3–4 Meals a Day

Best for: High training volume, hard labor, or refeed days

  • Pre-workout: Whey isolate + almond milk OR keto coffee
  • Post-workout: Lean protein + light fat (e.g., ground turkey + avocado)
  • Main meal: Skillet or bowl with protein, veggies, fat
  • Snack or dessert: Cottage cheese + coconut oil or low-carb pudding

Net Carbs Explained

Net Carbs = Total Carbs – Fiber – Sugar Alcohols (if zero GI)

Use net carbs, not total carbs, to measure ketogenic impact — especially when eating whole foods like flaxseed, vegetables, or yogurt. Don’t count the fiber from mushrooms or flax against your limit.


Smart Carbs to Consider (If You Need Them)

If you’re training hard, working long shifts, or extremely lean — carbs can help. The key is using strategic carbs, not junk:

  • Mushrooms, spinach, zucchini, eggplant
  • Avocado, tomatoes, peppers
  • Unsweetened Greek yogurt or cottage cheese (in moderation)
  • Small servings of berries or root veg (on cyclical days)

Keep it under:

  • 30g for regular days
  • 50g when targeting workouts
  • 70g max for refeed or leg days

Final Thoughts

This isn’t about being perfect — it’s about being resilient. You can use fasting, ketosis, and carb timing as tools to sculpt your body, sharpen your mind, and own your discipline. Once the cravings are broken and the system is reset, you’re in control — not the carbs.

Stay sharp. Stay lean. Stay resilient.

Iron Resilience

Why I’m Ending the 180 Protocol

Why I’m Ending the 180 Protocol (And What Replaced It)

Posted by Iron Resilience | May 2025

When I launched the 180 Protocol, it was designed as a challenge—a hard reset for men who were sick of their own excuses. It was about flipping the switch, building momentum, and reclaiming discipline in every domain: physical, mental, and spiritual.

And it worked.

But here’s the truth: I don’t need it anymore. Not because I failed it—but because I became it.

The 180 Protocol was never meant to be a permanent program. It was a weapon—blunt, powerful, and effective. But once that fire was lit, something deeper took hold. I didn’t want to “reset” anymore. I wanted to live shredded, live focused, and live by the swordevery single day.

That’s when I realized something: this isn’t a 180 anymore. This is who I am.

So I’m officially retiring the 180 Protocol as a standalone challenge. Not because it didn’t catch on, but because it’s been absorbed into something greater: the Iron Shred Lifestyle. It’s not a phase. It’s a way of life.

Here’s what changes:

  • No more cyclical cutting phases—we stay lean year-round
  • Nutrition is now keto-based, high-protein, and locked-in
  • Training isn’t seasonal—it’s relentless
  • Discipline isn’t optional—it’s daily

For those who still want to experience the mindset behind the 180, I’ll release a simplified guide soon. But moving forward, everything I do—from blog posts to training content—reflects this evolved mission.

Iron Resilience is no longer about 180 degrees.
It’s about one direction only: forward.

Stay sharp,
Live shredded,
And never look back.

Targeted and Cyclical Keto for Hard-Training Athletes: The Real Role of Carbs in a Ketogenic Lifestyle

Targeted and Cyclical Keto for Hard-Training Athletes: The Real Role of Carbs in a Ketogenic Lifestyle

By Iron Resilience

The ketogenic diet has become synonymous with extreme carb restriction—typically under 20g net carbs per day. While this guideline works for sedentary individuals or those seeking rapid fat loss, it doesn’t reflect the needs of men who train hard, walk 15–20 miles daily, or follow rigorous strength and conditioning protocols.

For high-output athletes, bodybuilders, or anyone burning thousands of calories a day, the role of carbohydrates in a ketogenic diet shifts significantly. When used with precision, carbs can become a powerful tool for performance, recovery, and long-term sustainability—without compromising the metabolic advantages of ketosis.


Understanding Carb Metabolism in High-Activity Individuals

Highly active individuals—especially those who resistance train and maintain very low body fat—have a drastically different metabolic profile than sedentary people. Due to increased energy expenditure, muscle mass, and insulin sensitivity, they:

  • Utilize glucose quickly for fuel during and after training
  • Re-enter ketosis faster following carbohydrate intake
  • Maintain fat adaptation even with moderate carb intake when timed strategically

In other words, a man burning 4,000–4,500 calories daily may be able to consume 30g, 50g, or even 70g of total carbs and remain in a state of ketosis, particularly if those carbs are timed around training windows and come from whole-food, low-glycemic sources.


Three Ketogenic Models for Performance

To align nutrition with performance goals, there are three primary approaches to ketogenic carb management:

1. Strict Ketogenic (Under 30g Total Carbs Daily)

  • Best For: Deep cutting phases, rest days, cognitive performance, or rapid fat adaptation
  • Fuel Source: Primarily fat and protein
  • Drawbacks: May limit anaerobic performance, muscle fullness, and glycogen-dependent training

2. Targeted Ketogenic Diet (30–50g Total Carbs)

  • Best For: Daily intense training, athletes with high step counts or caloric output
  • Strategy: Concentrate carbs pre- and post-workout to support intensity and recovery
  • Benefits: Preserves ketosis, enhances performance, replenishes glycogen locally without fat storage

3. Cyclical Ketogenic Diet (Up to 70g+ Carbs on Carb-Up Days)

  • Best For: Lean, advanced athletes undergoing heavy training or muscle-building cycles
  • Schedule: 1–2 carb-up days per week, ideally following glycogen-depleting workouts
  • Carb Sources: Root vegetables, squashes, berries, tubers, or seasonal fruits—mimicking ancestral intake

Ketosis Isn’t Fragile: It’s Flexible

Ketosis isn’t an on/off switch. It’s a dynamic metabolic state that responds to energy demands and nutrient intake. With intense training and frequent movement, glycogen is rapidly depleted. In these cases, consuming small to moderate amounts of carbohydrates does not necessarily “kick you out” of ketosis, especially if those carbs are quickly burned or stored in muscle tissue.

Many athletes following a targeted ketogenic approach remain in ketosis even with 40–60g total daily carbs, provided they:

  • Time carbs around workouts
  • Avoid high-fructose and processed carb sources
  • Maintain caloric balance and high protein intake

This is a far cry from the general population’s carbohydrate usage, which often leads to fat storage due to inactivity, overeating, and insulin resistance.


Strategic Carb Timing for the Keto Athlete

When carbohydrate intake is strategically placed around training, the body uses it to fuel performance, blunt muscle breakdown, and enhance recovery:

  • Pre-Workout (30–60 min before): 10–15g total carbs from high-protein, low-fat sources like cottage cheese, yogurt, or squash
  • Post-Workout (within 2 hours): 15–25g total carbs paired with protein for glycogen replenishment and anabolic signaling
  • Remaining Meals: Minimal carbs (mostly from fiber-rich vegetables or trace amounts in nuts, seeds, or eggs)

Properly applied, this maintains a ketogenic metabolism throughout the day while enhancing training output and hormonal health.


Evolutionary Logic: Carbs Were Cyclical and Intentional

Our ancestors did not consume processed carbohydrates or refined sugars. However, they did encounter seasonal and situational carb sources:

  • Honey during foraging seasons
  • Wild fruits and berries before winter
  • Root vegetables dug up in times of famine or preparation for physical exertion

These carbohydrates were used as tools—not staples. They were consumed in times of need: prior to hunts, during times of scarcity, or for survival. This cyclical exposure mirrors how elite ketogenic athletes today can utilize carb-up phases or pre-workout fueling to enhance performance while remaining metabolically flexible.


Carbohydrate Thresholds for Different Keto Phases

Carb Range (Total) Application Recommended Sources Purpose
<30g Strict keto, cutting, cognitive focus Leafy greens, mushrooms, eggs, fatty meat Maximize fat oxidation, deep ketosis
30–50g Targeted keto, high-output training Plain Greek yogurt, avocado, cooked veggies Support anaerobic training, recovery
50–70g+ Cyclical keto, mass phases, carb-up days Squash, berries, sweet potato, banana (limited) Restore glycogen, boost hormones, promote muscle gain

Conclusion: Use Carbs Like a Weapon, Not a Crutch

In a ketogenic lifestyle built for performance and discipline, carbohydrates are not the enemy—they’re a tool. When used strategically by high-output men who train hard, walk far, and live with intensity, small to moderate amounts of carbs can support recovery and performance without sacrificing the metabolic benefits of ketosis.

Forget the “one-size-fits-all” keto rules. Train harder. Eat smarter. Stay sharp.

Live by the sword.

Top Budget Keto Protein & Fat Sources for Cutting on a High-Performance Diet

Top Budget Keto Protein & Fat Sources for Cutting on a High-Performance Diet

Whether you’re cutting to extreme leanness or simply maintaining peak performance on a high-protein ketogenic diet, your grocery list needs to be dialed in. At Iron Resilience, we know the struggle: you want results, not excuses—and that includes saving money while hitting your macros. Here’s a ranked guide to the best bang-for-your-buck protein and fat sources for a strict ketogenic cutting phase.


Top Tier – Best Value & Macros

  • 1. Whole Eggs
    Affordable, versatile, complete nutrition.
    Macros (per egg): ~6g protein, ~5g fat, <1g carbs
  • 2. Pork Shoulder / Pork Roast / Pork Chops
    Bulk roasts give you serious volume and flavor.
    Macros (per 100g): ~25g protein, ~15–20g fat
  • 3. Chicken Thighs (with skin)
    Juicy and nutrient-dense, especially when baked or air-fried.
    Macros: ~20–25g protein, ~10–15g fat
  • 4. Ground Pork / Ground Turkey
    Easy to cook, great in skillets and bowls.
    Macros: ~20–22g protein, ~15–20g fat
  • 5. Canned Mackerel / Sardines / Tuna (in oil)
    Travel-friendly, high in omega-3s.
    Macros (per can): ~20g protein, ~10–15g fat

Mid Tier – Still Great, Slightly Pricier or Limited Use

  • 6. Bacon (store brand)
    Flavor boost with extra fat—use for toppings or wraps.
    Macros (2 slices): ~5g protein, ~12g fat
  • 7. 30–35% Fat Ground Beef
    Classic keto staple with flexible use.
    Macros: ~18–20g protein, ~20–25g fat
  • 8. Chicken Drumsticks / Wings
    Affordable, high-satiety options—crispy when baked.
    Macros: ~18–20g protein, ~10–15g fat
  • 9. Full-Fat Cottage Cheese + Sour Cream
    Perfect for keto dessert bowls or creamy sides.
    Macros (per 100g mix): ~10–12g protein, ~10–15g fat, ~3g net carbs
  • 10. Sunflower Seed Butter (unsweetened)
    Cheaper than almond butter, solid fat source.
    Macros (2 tbsp): ~7g protein, ~17g fat, ~3–4g net carbs

Optional / Filler Tier – Use Sparingly

  • 11. Cheese (cheddar, mozzarella, feta)
    Tasty and keto, but easy to overeat.
    Macros (30g): ~7g protein, ~9g fat
  • 12. Butter, Tallow, or Lard
    Great pure fat for cooking, but zero protein.
    Macros: 100% fat
  • 13. Almond Butter (unsweetened)
    Clean macros but pricier than sunflower butter.
    Macros (2 tbsp): ~7g protein, ~18g fat, ~3g net carbs
  • 14. Ground Chicken or Breaded Chicken (with breading removed)
    Cheap fallback—clean before use to stay keto.
    Macros: Varies—watch for carbs

Key Takeaway

When cutting on keto, you don’t need fancy supplements or overpriced products like powdered peanut butter. You need real protein, real fat, and smart shopping. Prioritize the top-tier options above and build your meals from whole food sources that work as hard as you do. Discipline doesn’t cost money—just effort.

Want a full grocery list and meal plan tailored to your budget and body goals? Join the Iron Resilience Brotherhood and level up your physique, mindset, and mission.

Reject Comfort, Reject Carbs, Reject Cowardice: Build the Body They Hate

THE COWARDS’ CREED VS THE CHAMPION’S CODE

Most people are fat, lazy, weak, and dying slowly. And they like it.

They hide behind slogans:
“Body positivity.”
“Just move more and eat less.”
“My doctor says red meat causes cancer.”
“Carbs give me energy.”
“Meat is bad for the environment.”

LIES. EXCUSES. WEAKNESS.


WHY THEY STAY FAT AND WEAK:

  • They worship comfort. Fast food. Soft drinks. Netflix. Pills. They’d rather be numb than strong.
  • They outsource their thinking. To TV, TikTok, and doctors who haven’t lifted since the ’80s. They fear meat and fat, but trust cereal and statins.
  • They fear pain and discipline. The gym hurts. Cooking takes time. So they hide behind diet soda and low-fat granola bars while their testosterone dies in silence.

THE CARB LIE

“You need carbs for energy.” That’s the mantra of the carb cult.

But what they don’t tell you is that carbs are short-term fuel with long-term damage. Chronically elevated insulin, unstable blood sugar, sugar crashes, fat gain, and inflammation—carbs cause it all.

Sugar is a drug. It lights up the same centers in your brain as cocaine. And they put it in everything.

The average person is a walking insulin bomb, tired, hungry, and emotionally unstable—because they believe cereal is health food and meat is murder. This is the nutritional Twilight Zone.


HIGH CARB, LOW FAT, LOW TESTOSTERONE

The mainstream “fitness” plan is this:

  • High carbs
  • Low fat
  • Minimal meat
  • Protein powders over real food

That’s not a muscle-building plan. That’s a castration protocol.

No dietary fat = no testosterone. No red meat = no iron, no B12, no zinc. Carbs spike insulin and shut down fat burning. And protein without fat is useless for natural lifters trying to recover and build real mass.


THE VEGAN LIE

Veganism is not strength. It’s submission.

Low protein, low fat, incomplete amino acids, and soy estrogen bombs. You don’t build a warrior body on lentils and lies. You build it on flesh, fat, fire, and heavy iron.

The vegan movement isn’t about health. It’s about control. A weak, hungry, testosterone-deficient population is easy to rule, easy to drug, and easy to sell lab-grown food to.


WHY MAINSTREAM MEDICAL & NUTRITION “EXPERTS” HATE MEAT, MUSCLE, & MASCULINITY

The system doesn’t want you jacked, focused, independent, and full of testosterone.

  • They push statins over steak.
  • They fear red meat more than obesity or sugar addiction.
  • They tell you lifting is dangerous, but antidepressants and fake food are fine.
  • They want men soft, women sick, and kids doped up and disconnected from reality.

This is why the fitness mainstream and medical mainstream work together—to keep people weak, obedient, and afraid of real strength.


THE CHAMPION’S CODE

  1. Lift heavy. Lift hard. Lift always.
    Strength first. Aesthetics second. No days off. Train like your life depends on it—because it does.
  2. Eat like a predator, not a pet.
    Fatty meat. Eggs. Fish. Butter. No seed oils. No grains. No sugar. No soy.
  3. Use tools that work.
    Supplements, TRT, fasting, keto, carnivore. Don’t ask for permission to reclaim your health and power. Do what gets results. Period.
  4. Reject their soft science and “safe” advice.
    The food pyramid is a joke. “Balanced diet” means balanced weakness. Be radical. Be relentless.
  5. Kill the coward inside you.
    Every day you make a choice—growth or decay. There is no neutral. Get jacked. Get sharp. Or get left behind.

THE BOTTOM LINE:

You’re either building a fortress of muscle, willpower, and pride… or you’re decaying in a pit of carbs, weakness, and lies.

TRAIN. EAT. GROW. DOMINATE.

Week 2 Keto Fatigue, Strength Gains & Real Shred Progress – 180 Protocol Update

Week 2 Update – 90 Day Shred on the 180 Protocol

Welcome to Week 2, Day 1 of the 90 Day Shred, part of the Iron Resilience 180 Protocol—where real-world strength, discipline, and clean eating collide to build lean, natural physiques and sharpen the mind.

The Truth About Keto Fatigue

If you’re on keto, you already know. It hits hard in the first few weeks. The fatigue, the brain fog, the sense that no matter how much fat, salt, or protein you eat—you’re still drained. That’s normal. It’s your body learning how to burn fat for fuel instead of sugar. And there’s no shortcut. You just have to live with it until your body adapts.

What makes it worse is slipping up. Go over your carbs, and you reset that adaptation clock. You’ll go right back through that energy crash again. It’s brutal—but here’s why I stick with it:

  • No more hypoglycemia: My blood sugar doesn’t crash anymore.
  • Stable moods: Less emotional volatility and brain fog.
  • Health > aesthetics: Keto isn’t for looking sexy—it’s for staying sane and healthy. Looking good is just a side effect.

The reality is most people don’t want to hear the truth. You can’t get shredded while eating junk. You can’t out-train or out-supplement a bad diet. Those YouTubers eating cereal and getting jacked? Genetic outliers. That’s not me. That’s not you. For 99% of us, the only way to transform is through consistency, clean eating, and serious training.

Today’s Nutrition – Week 2 Day 1

3 AM Meal:

  • 3 small chicken thighs (skin-on, bone-in)
  • 50g mixed nuts
  • 20g trail mix (low-carb, light raisins)
  • 50ml peanut oil
  • 25ml coconut oil
  • 8 small restaurant butter packets
  • 1 scoop whey isolate
  • 1 cup almond milk
  • 1.5 tbsp natural peanut butter
  • 175g lactose-free fat-free Greek yogurt

11 AM Meal:

  • 12g pork fat
  • 2 whole eggs
  • 2 cups spinach
  • 1 cup bell peppers and onions
  • 2 tbsp chipotle sauce
  • 4 small chicken thighs (skin-on, bone-in)
  • 6 small beef sausages
  • 20g trail mix
  • 1 scoop whey isolate
  • 100g Greek yogurt
  • 2 tbsp natural peanut butter

Post-workout snack: Small portion of mixed nuts with raisins

Calories & Macros (Approximate)

  • Total Calories: ~3,000 kcal
  • Protein: ~280g
  • Fat: ~200g
  • Net Carbs: ~18g

This keeps me well within keto ranges, high in protein for muscle retention, and high in fats for stable energy. Despite the raisins and minimal vegetables, I’m still in ketosis.

Workout Log – Chest, Triceps, Shoulders, and Delts

Time: 3:30PM – 4:10PM

Flat Barbell Bench Press
- 245 x1
- 230 x6
- 230 x8
- 225 x10
- 215 x15

Close Grip Barbell Bench Press
- 215 x10
- 210 x10
- 205 x10

Incline Dumbbell Bench to Flyes
- 85 x10
- 85 x10
- 70 x10

Incline Dumbbell Bench Press
- 70 x12

Incline Dumbbell Pullovers
- 70 x10 x3 sets

Dumbbell Overhead Triceps Extension
- 60 x12 x2
- 50 x12

Lateral Dumbbell Raise
- 40 x8
- 30 x12 x2

Cable Pushdowns
- 137 x12 x4

Rope Pushdowns
- 137 x12 x3

Seated Dumbbell Press
- 75 x12
- 60 x12
- 50 x12

Cable Bent Over Lateral Raises
- 50 x12 x3

Cable Flyes
- 50 x20 x3

Calories Burned:

Workout burn: ~350–400 kcal
Steps walked: 27,000 (~1,200–1,400 kcal burn)

Current Stats

  • Weight: 205 lbs
  • Height: 6’0”
  • Estimated Body Fat: 8–10%

Closing Thoughts

Keto isn’t easy—but it’s worth it. You trade the short-term hit of carbs for long-term control over energy, mood, and metabolism. You don’t need superhuman genetics. Just discipline, honesty, and consistency. That’s the 180 Protocol. That’s Iron Resilience.

See you in the next update—stay strong, stay sharp.

6 Unbreakable Nutrition Rules for Fat Loss and Mental Discipline

6 Unbreakable Nutrition Rules for Fat Loss and Mental Discipline

Intro: I went from 276 lbs and obese to 205 lbs at 10% body fat. No gimmicks — just discipline, real food, and consistency. I cut carbs from grains and sugar, focused on healthy fats and protein, tracked every calorie, fasted, hit my step goals daily, and lifted weights 4–7 days a week (currently 6).

1. Track Every Bite and Sip

Log every portion of food and drink — even tiny amounts like a teaspoon of milk.

If it’s not oxygen or zero calories, it counts.

Use a food scale for accuracy.

Be honest — even the “small stuff” adds up.

2. Set Calories at Base Maintenance

Only set your calorie goal at base maintenance (not including exercise).

This gives you full control to add or subtract based on daily activity.

3. Track Your Steps and Activity

Wear a step tracker or fitness watch every day.

At night, log:

  • Total calories burned from your step tracker.
  • Any extra activity (e.g., “15 minutes biking”).

4. Stay Within Your Calorie Budget

Track everything daily, no exceptions.

Once you hit your calories for the day:

  • Stop eating or
  • Do more activity to “earn” a little more food.

No negotiations. Hunger or cravings don’t change the math.

5. Understand the Consequences of “Just a Little”

Even “just a little” cake, chips, or fast food:

  • Has no nutritional benefit (only taste).
  • Causes blood sugar spikes and fat gain.

Junk food is high calorie and low nutrition — it sets you back for almost no reward.

6. Change How You View Food

See food as fuel, not comfort or entertainment.

Prioritize:

  • Macros (protein, carbs, fats)
  • Micronutrients (vitamins, minerals)
  • Satiety (how filling it is)

Flavor can still be enjoyed by modifying recipes, but the mindset must stay locked on fuel, not indulgence.

Summary: Fat loss isn’t complicated — it’s just hard. Discipline, honesty, and consistency will always beat hacks and shortcuts. Stick to these six rules and watch your body and mindset change.

 

The 180 Protocol: Building Iron Resilience Through Ketogenic Discipline

The 180 Protocol: Building Iron Resilience Through Ketogenic Discipline

When it comes to building true resilience—metabolic, hormonal, and physical—my approach is simple but strict. I follow a high-protein ketogenic diet designed to fuel long-duration, low-to-moderate intensity endurance and strength training. This protocol prioritizes metabolic efficiency, hormonal balance, and lean body composition through precision nutrition and consistent training.

Why Keto is Optimal for My Training Style

For the type of training I do—high-volume weightlifting, hours of walking daily, and consistent conditioning—a ketogenic or low-carb diet offers a serious edge. When combined with high protein intake and whole foods, it enhances:

  • Insulin sensitivity
  • Fat oxidation
  • Metabolic flexibility

In other words, your body gets better at using fat for fuel, while preserving lean muscle mass and minimizing inflammation.

The Purpose of Carbs (and Why I Use Them Strategically)

Carbohydrates do have a place in performance nutrition—but only when they serve a purpose. They are most beneficial for:

  • High-intensity glycolytic training (like CrossFit, sprinting, or volume-heavy bodybuilding)
  • Bulking phases, where insulin’s anabolic properties can support muscle growth

Outside of these contexts, carbs are non-essential. I treat them like a performance tool, not a dietary staple. I cycle carbs around workouts to fuel performance and ensure they’re used immediately, rather than stored. My carb sources are always nutrient-dense: berries, avocados, nuts, non-starchy vegetables, and some dairy. No grains, sugar, potatoes, or high-sugar tropical fruits.

Cheat Meals Done Right

A “cheat day” for me doesn’t mean junk food. It means a maintenance-calorie day where I enjoy more healthy fats, a little extra dairy, or a few more carb-rich veggies or nuts. Even then, I stay in control. No bingeing, no processed garbage—just a mental and physical reset.

The Real Superfoods: Low-Carb Vegetables

Forget carrots and turnips. When it comes to fiber, antioxidants, and micronutrients with almost no caloric load, here’s what makes the cut:

  • Spinach – more vitamin C than most fruits, plus iron and fiber
  • Bell peppers, kale, asparagus, cabbage – colorful, nutrient-dense, low in sugar
  • Avocados – fiber, potassium, and healthy fats
  • Mushrooms – okay in moderation, not the best carb-wise

Your plate should look like a rainbow. Those colors come from phytochemicals—like carotenoids, chlorophylls, and anthocyanins—that are proven to support:

  • Reduced inflammation
  • Hormonal balance
  • Brain health
  • Cardiovascular function

“Eat the rainbow” isn’t just marketing. It’s biochemistry.

Final Thoughts: Precision, Not Perfection

I keep carbs under 50 grams most days—never more than 70—and they’re always from whole foods. I train hard, walk 5–6 hours a day, and stay dialed in. The results I get come not from shortcuts, but from consistency.
The 180 Protocol isn’t about restriction—it’s about reclaiming control over your physiology. High-protein. Clean fats. Smart carbs. Relentless consistency.

That’s how you build iron resilience.

Holy Shit Week Final Log

Holy Shit Week Final Log

Date: April 20–27, 2025

Objective: Hit extreme photo-ready condition; sharpen discipline, body, and mind under maximal pressure.

Daily Caloric Intake:

  • Calories: 2,300–2,900 kcal/day
  • Notable spike: Day 4 — 2,920 kcal (96g carb refeed)

Macronutrient Split:

  • Protein: 270–310g/day
  • Fats: 100–135g/day
  • Carbs:
    • Usually
    • 96g carbs on Day 4 only (controlled strategic refeed)

Foods Consumed:

  • Chicken breast (primary protein source)
  • Whole eggs (moderate; mostly whites)
  • Lean ground pork, pork chops, skinless chicken tenders
  • Whey isolate (sometimes to top off protein)
  • Peanut butter, bread, waffles, jam (available but *barely touched*)
  • Heavy sea salt usage (5–7g sodium/day)
  • Black coffee, water (4–6 liters/day)
  • Electrolyte supplementation (sodium, potassium)
  • No bad sugars, grains, seed oils, processed junk

Activity Breakdown:

  • Steps: 30,000+ daily (work + intentional walking)
  • Weight Training: 1 hour daily (Mike Mentzer high-intensity method; progressive overload to failure)
  • Stationary Bike: 1 hour daily (steady state cardio)
  • Core Work: 15 minutes daily
  • HIIT: 10–15 minutes daily (explosive metabolic finishers)
  • Hot/Cold Showers: Daily for shock therapy
  • Sleep: Prioritized early wake-ups, deep sleep for full recovery

Daily Calorie Burn Estimate:

  • 4,500–6,000+ kcal/day

Conditioning Results:

  • 5–6+ lbs total weight dropped
  • ~2% body fat lost over 7 days
  • Noticeably sharper vascularity, skin tightness, muscle separation
  • Full mental transition from keto fog → sharpened resilience
  • No cheats, no deviations, full compliance with plan

Mentality Theme:

Iron Resilience:

“Pain turned into strength. Weakness turned into unbreakable will.”

Notes:
This was the cleanest, hardest executed cut you’ve ever done. No compromise. No comfort. 100% mission focus. Final condition: stage/photo-ready — achieved.

Weight Lifting Full Routine (Sets & Reps Only):

Day 1 (Chest + Triceps + Core + Conditioning)

Chest:

  • Flat Barbell Bench Press — 4×7–15
  • Incline Dumbbell Bench Press — 3×10–12
  • Incline Dumbbell Fly — 2×12
  • Cable Flyes — 4×12
  • Dips — 2×12–15
  • Decline Barbell Bench Press — 2×15

Triceps:

  • Dumbbell Overhead Triceps Extension — 3×5–12
  • Cable Overhead Triceps Extension — 4×15
  • Cable Pushdowns — 3×12
  • V-Bar Pushdowns — 3×12
  • EZ-Bar Skullcrusher — 3×12

Core:

  • Weighted Crunch — 2×10–50
  • Hanging Leg Raise — 1×30
  • Cable Crunch — 3×20

Conditioning:

  • Burpees — 3×9–35
  • Stationary Bike — 26:15 minutes (~6.15 km)

Day 2 (Back + Biceps + Core + Conditioning)

Back:

  • Chin Up — 4×10–12
  • Seated Yates Cable Row — 4×9–20
  • Barbell Row — 3×9–10
  • Chest Supported Dumbbell Row — 3×12
  • Neutral Grip Pulldown — 4×12

Biceps:

  • Dumbbell Hammer Curl — 4×12
  • Barbell Curl — 3×12
  • Dumbbell Concentration Curl — 3×12
  • Wrist Curl — 3×12
  • Seated Incline Dumbbell Curl — 4×12

Rear Delts:

  • Rear Delt Machine Fly — 4×15
  • Cable Face Pull — 3×12
  • Straight-Arm Cable Pushdown — 4×12

Core:

  • Cable Crunch — 4×25
  • Decline Sit-up — 4×15–20

Conditioning:

  • Walking — 3.22 mi (1:26:00)

Day 3 (Legs + Shoulders + Core)

Legs:

  • Hack Squat Machine — 4×12–15
  • Leg Press — 4×10–20
  • Standing Calf Raise Machine — 4×12
  • Lying Leg Curl Machine — 4×12

Shoulders:

  • Seated Dumbbell Press — 4×5–9
  • Bent Over Lateral Raises — 3×12
  • Lateral Dumbbell Raise — 3×12
  • Cable Lateral Raises — 4×12
  • Dumbbell Shrugs — 4×12
  • Cable Face Pull — 3×12

Core:

  • Cable Crunch — 3×12
  • Leg Extension Machine — 3×12–20
  • Seated Leg Curl Machine — 3×12

Summary

Holy Shit Week is officially over.

April 5th: 207 lbs, 32″ waist, 44″ chest, 17″ arms, ~12% bodyfat.
Today: 211 lbs, 30″ waist, 44.5″ chest, 17″ arms, ~12% bodyfat.
Chest-to-waist ratio improved from 1.375 to 1.48.
Walked 197,420 steps. Trained 6 days weights/cardio/HIIT.
Burned 11,957 calories above maintenance. Ate ~7,500 calories total.
Lost around 3–4 lbs of pure fat…
But still feel skinny-fat and disappointed.
Was it a win or a failure?
No more birthdays, holidays, or cheat days.
Only cooking, only suffering, only discipline.